Method of separating electrochemically produced dinitrogen pentoxide from its solution in nitric acid

ABSTRACT

A method of separating N 2  O 5  from its solution in nitric acid which comprises the steps of: (a) preparing, by the electrochemical oxidation of N 2  O 4  in nitric acid, a nitric acid solution at a temperature of at least 10° C. containing at least 45 wt. % of dissolved (N 2  O 4  +N 2  O 5 ) and having a dissolved N 2  O 5  :nitric acid ratio by weight of at least 1:3, and (b) cooling the acid solution to less than 8° C. until an N 2  O 5  solvate precipitates from solution. The main advantage of the invention is that it enables electrically-efficient electrochemical methods to be employed in the production of the acid solution from which the solute is recovered.

This invention relates to a method of separating dinitrogen pentoxide (N₂ O₅) from its solution in nitric acid.

It is well known that dinitrogen pentoxide (N₂ O₅) can be prepared at relatively low cost by the electrochemical oxidation of dinitrogen tetroxide (N₂ O₄) dissolved in concentrated nitric acid. Typically, the solution of N₂ O₄ in nitric acid is situated in the anode compartment of an electrochemical cell with a second solution of N₂ O₄ in nitric acid present in the cathode compartment. An acid-resistance ion-exchange membrane separates the two compartments. When current is passed through the cell, N₂ O₅ is formed in the anode compartment and water in the cathode compartment.

It is also known from published USSR Inventor's Certificate SU-1089047A that solid N₂ O₅ can be separated from strong, 35-40 wt % solutions of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid produced electrochemically, by the subsequent addition to the solution of moderate amounts of liquid N₂ O₄ at a temperature of -5° C. to 0° C. A 1:1 by weight solvate of N₂ O₅ with nitric acid precipitates from the solution, from which pure N₂ O₅ can be recovered by low pressure sublimation.

One of the disadvantages of this method of N₂ O₅ separation is that it requires a starting solution of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid which is inefficient and costly to produce electrochemically. SU-1089047A teaches that at the temperature (typically 10° C. to 15° C.) of electrochemical preparation of the 35-40 wt % N₂ O₅ starting solution, the total (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅) concentration in the solution must not exceed 38-40 wt % in order to suppress the unwanted formation of precipitate in the electrochemical cell itself. By simply subtraction, it can be seen that the solution from which the N₂ O₅ is to be separated must contain less than 5 wt % N₂ O₄. However, in practice the electrical efficiency of electrochemical N₂ O₅ production decreases sharply with increasing N₂ O₅ concentration and decreasing N₂ O₄ concentration (especially at N₂ O₄ concentrations at or below 5 wt %) in the anolyte. This is due in part to leakage of N₂ O₄ and water through the cell membrane from the catholyte to the anolyte and also in part to the reduced electrical conductivity of the anolyte at low N₂ O₄ concentrations which decreases electrical efficiency. Such leakage can (in the case of N₂ O₄ leakage) be suppressed by employing a low N₂ O₄ concentration in the catholyte, but this reduces catholyte conductivity. Water leakage can be reduced but at the expense of removing it at frequent intervals from the catholyte in order to keep its concentration low.

It has now been discovered that provided the anolyte is maintained at a temperature of at least 10° C., the anolyte can contain a much higher dissolved nitrogen oxide content than has hitherto been realised so enabling more efficient electrochemical methods of N₂ O₅ generation to be utilised by virtue of the anolytes' higher N₂ O₄ content.

Accordingly, the present invention provides a method of separating N₂ O₅ from its solution in nitric acid which comprises the steps of:

(a) preparing, by the electrochemical oxidation of N₂ O₄ in nitric acid, a nitric acid solution at a temperature of at least 10° C. containing at least 45 wt % of dissolved (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅) and having a dissolved N₂ O₅ :nitric acid ratio by weight of at least 1:3.

(b) cooling the acid solution to less than 8° C. until an N₂ O₅ solvate precipitates from solution.

The method preferably further comprises the subsequent step of

(c) recovering the N₂ O₅ solvate from the acid solution, most preferably by filtration.

In order to enhance the yield of solid precipitated, the acid solution prepared in step (a) preferably contains at least 50 wt % of dissolved (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅). A maximum dissolved (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅) concentration of up to about 60 wt % in step (a) is achievable without the formation of a separate liquid N₂ O₄ phase. In practice, a maximum (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅) concentration in solution of about 55 wt % is recommended.

In order to ensure that premature precipitation of N₂ O₅ is prevented during the electrochemical oxidation of N₂ O₄, the solution is preferably prepared in step (a) at a temperature of at least 12° C. more preferably at a temperature of from 15° C. to 30° C. and most preferably at a temperature of from 20° C. to 25° C. The solubility of N₂ O₅ advantageously increases with temperature especially at high N₂ O₄ concentrations in solution, although above about 25° C. thermal decomposition of N₂ O₅ can become a problem.

At precipitation temperatures at or above about 5° C., the concentration of both N₂ O₅ and N₂ O₄ in the acid must approach saturation in order to produce any N₂ O₅ precipitation and even then the yield of precipitate tends to be very low. The minimum precipitation temperature is preferably at least -25° C., more preferably at least -20° C., most preferably at least -15° C. Although the amount of N₂ O₅ -rich solute increases with decreasing precipitation temperature, the cost of cooling the solution also increases and at temperature below -15° C., contamination of the precipitate with solid N₂ O₄ becomes an increasing problem. For these reasons, the precipitation temperature is most preferably within the range -15° C. to 0° C.

The acid solution is preferably cooled to below -5° C., more preferably below -10° C., especially where the solution contains at least 50 wt % (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅). This is because the combined effect of cooling and solvate precipitation on such solutions is a tendency for the N₂ O₄ to reach its saturation limit and form a separate liquid phase into which the N₂ O₅ will migrate so reducing solute yield. However, at temperature below about 0° to -5° C., it has been found that the reduction in N₂ O₄ solubility with decreasing temperature during solvate precipitation becomes much less pronounced and may even increase slightly, whereas the corresponding reduction in N₂ O₅ solubility with decreasing temperature tends to become more pronounced. Therefore, the amount of phase-separated N₂ O₄ produced with decreasing acid temperature remains relatively small, and this factor, together with the steadily decreasing solubility of N₂ O₅ in N₂ O₄ with decreasing temperature, minimises N₂ O₅ losses into that N₂ O₄ phase.

The amount of N₂ O₅ precipitated also advantageously increases with increasing N₂ O₅ concentration in the solution prepared in step (a). It has been discovered that the acid solution prepared in step (a) may contain an approximate N₂ O₅ :nitric acid ratio by weight of up to at least 1:1.8 at temperatures at or above 10° C. without the formation of an N₂ O₅ precipitate in solution. The overall upper limit for dissolved N₂ O₅ concentration in solution is about 40 parts of weight of N₂ O₅ to 60 parts by weight of nitric acid, preferably 35 parts by weight of N₂ O₅ per 65 parts by weight of nitric acid.

The minimum concentration of N₂ O₅ which must be present in solution in order to effect its precipitation during step (b) is found to vary according to the temperature of and N₂ O₄ concentration within the acid solution, and is generally found to increase with decreasing N₂ O₄ concentration and increasing temperature. For example, at a solution temperature of -15° C., the ratio by weight of N₂ O₅ to nitric acid required to effect N₂ O₅ precipitation must be at least about 1:3 even if the dissolved N₂ O₄ concentration within the solution approaches saturation, whereas at a solution temperature of +5° to +8° C., the required minimum ratio rises considerably and must be greater than about 3:7. Since the amount of solid precipitated increases with increasing N₂ O₅ concentration in solution, the ratio by weight of N₂ O₅ to pure nitric acid in the solution prepared in step (a) is preferably at least 1:2.8 more preferably at least 3:7, in order to produce a reasonable yield of precipitate.

For any given precipitation temperature, the amount of N₂ O₅ precipitated during step (b) generally increases with increasing concentration of dissolved N₂ O₄ present in solution. For this reason, the solution prepared in step (a) preferably contains at least 15 wt %, more preferably at least 20 wt %, most preferably at least 25 wt %, of N₂ O₅. The ratio by weight of N₂ O₄ to nitric acid in the solution prepared in step (a) is preferably at least 1:4, more preferably at least 1:3. A high N₂ O₄ concentration has the added advantage that during step (a) it increases the electrical conductivity of the anolyte and enables a higher N₂ O₄ concentration to be used in the catholyte, and so improves the electrical efficiency of the electrochemical process for producing N₂ O₅. The preferred maximum concentration of N₂ O₄ in the acid solution produced in step (a) is a single phase saturated N₂ O₄ solution, although N₂ O.sub. 4 concentration is conveniently not greater than 30 wt % since cooling the solution with an N₂ O₄ concentration at or below this level produces little or no separate liquid N₂ O₄ into which appreciable amounts of N₂ O₅ can migrate to reduce the yield of solute especially if a precipitation temperature of about -5° C. or higher is used in step (b).

The present method preferably forms part of a process for the continuous or semi-continuous electrochemical generation of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid, in which N₂ O₄ in nitric acid is preferably recirculated through the anode compartment of an electrochemical cell. N₂ O₅ solute is preferably recovered by the present method from at least part of the recirculated product stream from the anode compartment. Cooling of at least part of the acid solution stream to effect N₂ O₅ solute precipitation at least partly removes the heat absorbed by the stream during anodic oxidation. Thereafter, before the acid solution stream is returned to the cell to effect further N₂ O₅ generation therein, the precipitated N₂ O₅ solute is preferably recovered from this stream, most preferably by filtration. Since the product stream must be recharged with N₂ O₄ before being returned to the cell, then it is preferred that this step should be performed after recovery of the N₂ O₅ solute previously precipitated by cooling.

In order to purify the N₂ O₅ solute removed from the acid solution, it is conveniently washed with liquid N₂ O₄ to remove nitric acid from its surface. Thereafter, it may be dried in a gas stream of, for example, air, N₂ or O₂, to drive off residual N₂ O₄. The gas stream may contain small amounts of ozone to convert at least some of the remaining residual N₂ O₄ to solid N₂ O₅. Alternatively, in order to effect N₂ O₅ purification the solute may be sublimed at a temperature of 5° C. to 10° C. and at a reduced pressure of 30-100 mm Hg, and the sublimed N₂ O₅ vapour resolidified on a cold surface at about -20° C. The solute so cleansed or the solid N₂ O₅ so purified may then be dissolved in organic solvents for use as a nitrating agent in, for example, the process of converting hydroxyalkyloxetanes to nitratoalkyloxetanes as described in U.S. Pat. No. 3058994.

The present method may alternatively be used as a means of producing further solutions of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid which are either more concentrated than and/or have lower N₂ O₄ concentrations than the acid solution from which the N₂ O₅ solute is initially recovered. In this case, the solute cleansing and purification steps described above are largely unnecessary. Instead, since the solute essentially consists of a mixture of N₂ O₅ and nitric acid it may be dissolved in nitric acid to produce solutions of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid to the required concentration which contain very little N₂ O₄ in sharp contrast to the high levels of N₂ O₄ to be found in the solution produced in step (a). Redissolving the solute in nitric acid is especially advantageous for producing nitric acid solutions containing more than 25 wt % N₂ O₅ and/or less than 3% N₂ O₄ since such solutions are difficult to produce efficiently and at relatively low cost by purely electrochemical means.

Mixtures of solute in nitric acid may also be prepared which contain N₂ O₅ above its saturation limit in nitric acid. The resulting slurries provide more concentrated forms of N₂ O₅ which are relatively stable and more easily stored and transported than solid solute.

The present invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which

FIG. 1 is an outline phase diagram of acid solution components illustrating the conditions under which N₂ O₅ precipitation occurs; and

FIG. 2 is a schematic process flow diagram of the method of the invention used in conjuction with a continuous process for the electrochemical generation of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid.

A series of experiments were conducted to establish the phase diagram illustrated in FIG. 1.

Experiments 1 to 4

Four solutions of N₂ O₅ in 100 g nitric acid were prepared at known N₂ O₅ concentrations, and were cooled to -15° C. In four separate experiments liquid N₂ O₄ also at -15° C. was slowly added with mixing to each of these solutions. The rate of addition was sufficiently slow to ensure complete dissolution of N₂ O₄ into the acid solution, so preventing a build-up of a separate N₂ O₄ phase before the N₂ O₄ concentration in the acid had reached saturation.

N₂ O₄ addition was continued until the formation of a white precipitate in solution was observed, and the amount of N₂ O₄ added up to this point was recorded. Thereafter, N₂ O₄ addition was continued further until the solution had virtually reached its saturation limit, the formation of further precipitate being observed during this time.

The precipitate was recovered by filtration on a Buchner funnel, washed with liquid N₂ O₄ at -15° C. to remove excess acid, and dried on the funnel in a stream of cold dry air. The recovered precipitate was identified by RAMAN spectroscopy as an N₂ O₅ /nitric acid solvate.

The amount of added N₂ O₄ required to initiate precipitation of N₂ O₅ was found to be dependent on the initial concentration of N₂ O₅ in the acid solution. This can be seen from Table 1 below which summarises the result of each experiment at the point of initial precipitation.

                                      TABLE 1                                      __________________________________________________________________________                                 wt % Composition                                   Amount of N.sub.2 O.sub.5                                                                        Amount of N.sub.2 O.sub.4                                                                of Acid Solution                                   Present in 100 g  Added to Initiate                                                                        at Initial N.sub.2 O.sub.5                         Nitric Acid wt % N.sub.2 O.sub.5                                                                 N.sub.2 O.sub.5 Precipitation                                                            Precipitation                                      Expt                                                                              (g)      in Solution                                                                          (g)       HNO.sub.3.sup.3                                                                    N.sub.2 O.sub.5                                                                    N.sub.2 O.sub.4                            __________________________________________________________________________     1  46.2     31.6  15.8      61.73                                                                              28.52                                                                               9.75                                      2  43.1     30.12 21.1      60.90                                                                              26.25                                                                              12.85                                      3  35.4     26.14 51.1      53.62                                                                              18.98                                                                              27.40                                      4  29.1     23.07  68.7*    50.8*                                                                              14.6*                                                                              34.6*                                      __________________________________________________________________________      *A second, liquid N.sub.2 O.sub.4 phase began to appear at this point and      the experiment was stopped. No N.sub.2 O.sub.5 precipitation was observed                                                                               

A similar precipitation effect is observed by first adding liquid N₂ O₄ and then cooling the solution to -15° C. For example, by adding at least 15.8 g of N₂ O₄ to the N₂ O₅ solution used in Experiment 1, precipitation of N₂ O₅ is observed at or before the solution has cooled to -15° C.

Experiments 5 to 7

An almost saturated solution of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid was obtained by dissolving solid N₂ O₅ (11.5 g) in nitric acid (20.3 g) at 20° C. to produce a 36.2 wt % solution of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid. The solution was cooled and liquid N₂ O₄ slowly added with mixing to raise its concentration in solution in an attempt to precipitate N₂ O₅ in a similar manner to that described in Experiments 1 to 4. The experiment was conducted three times over at different temperatures. The upper temperature limit and minimum addition of N₂ O₄ necessary to initiate precipitation were noted. The results of these experiments are given in Table 2 below.

                  TABLE 2                                                          ______________________________________                                                     Amount of N.sub.2 O.sub.4                                                                   Wt % Composition of                                               Added to Initiate                                                                           Acid Solution at N.sub.2 O.sub.5                      Temperature Precipitation                                                                               Precipitation                                         Expt (°C.)                                                                              (g)          HNO.sub.3                                                                            N.sub.2 O.sub.5                                                                      N.sub.2 O.sub.4                       ______________________________________                                         5    10         *14.6        *44.7 *25.3 *30.0                                 6    8          3.45         57.59 32.62 9.79                                  7    5          3.45         57.59 32.62 9.79                                  ______________________________________                                          *A second, liquid N.sub.2 O.sub.4 phase began to appear at this point and      the experiment was stopped. No N.sub.2 O.sub.5 precipitation was observed                                                                               

This series of three experiments shows that a solution temperature of 8° C. or less is required to effect N₂ O₅ precipitation. At 10° C., no precipitate forms regardless of N₂ O₄ concentration in solution.

Experiment 8

Solid N₂ O₅ was added to a known weight of a 1:1 ratio by weight mixture of 100% nitric acid and N₂ O₄ maintained at 25° C., until no more N₂ O₅ would dissolve. It was observed that N₂ O₄ started to form a separate liquid phase at the end of N₂ O₅ addition.

Initial weight of N₂ O₄ /HNO₃ mixture: 11.7 g

Amount of N₂ O₄ added: 4.1 g

The composition of a 1:1 N₂ O₄ /HNO₃ solution saturated with N₂ O₅ is therefore:

37.0 wt % HNO₃

37.0 wt % N₂ O₄

25.9 wt % N₂ O₅

SUMMARY

The results of Experiments 1 to 8 are shown plotted on the phase diagram illustrated in FIG. 1.

Key to Table 1

A=Experiment No 1

B=Experiment No 2

C=Experiment No 3

D=Experiment No 4

E=Experiment No 5

F=Experiment Nos 6 and 7

G=Experiment No 8

H=Point estimated from published sources

I=Point estimated from published sources

J=Point estimated from published sources

Line X₁ Y₁ =line of constant weight ratio of HNO₃ : N₂ O₅ for Experiment No 4.

It will be seen from the phase diagram of FIG. 1 that the broken curved line taken through points A, B, C, D and H represents the concentration of the three components HNO₃, N₂ O₄ and N₂ O₅ in the nitric solution at a constant temperature of -15° C. Similar curves are also shown for nitric acid solutions at 5°-8° C., 10° C. and 25° C.

The solid line which passes through the cusps in each curve (line X₂ Y₂) represents a boundary to the left of which the solution is saturated in N₂ O₄.

The phase diagram may be used to determine the appropriate amount of N₂ O₅ solute which will precipitate from any given singlephase acid solution of N₂ O₅ and N₂ O₄ in nitric acid. For example, if an acid solution of composition Z is cooled to -15° C., the solution will lose both N₂ O₅ and nitric acid and will assume a composition on the ABCDH curve. This composition will depend also upon the ratio of N₂ O₅ to HNO₃ in the solute. If this solute composition is represented by point P (50% N₂ O₅, 50% HNO₃), then the eventual composition of the acid solution will be approximately at the point of intersection between the straight line passing through points P and Z, and the curve passing through points A, B and C. By comparing the composition Z with the predicted composition of the solution after cooling, the amount of N₂ O₅ which will precipitate from solution into the solute can be calculated.

EXAMPLE 1

FIG. 2 is a schematic process flow diagram illustrating the use of the present method in conjunction with a continuous process for the electrochemical production of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid. The temperatures shown are typical of those which may be employed.

The N₂ O₅ production process outlined in FIG. 2 employs a temperature-controlled reservoir 2, a recirculation pump 4, an electrochemical cell 6, and a flow divider 8 all connected together in a production loop to allow at least partial recirculation of the product acid. For any given rate of N₂ O₅ production, recirculation increases the turbulent regime hence conductivity of the cell and reduces the concentration gradient of solution components through the cell. The cell 6 has an anode compartment 10, a cathode compartment 12, and an ion exchange membrane 14 separating the two compartments. The membrane 14 is preferably an anionic or semi-permeable (non-ionic) membrane.

A solution of N₂ O₄ and N₂ O₅ in nitric acid at 10° C. is fed continuously by the pump 4 from the reservoir 2 through the anode compartment 10 where some of the N₂ O₄ is electrochemically oxidised to N₂ O₅. The solution pumped from the reservoir 2 is saturated with N₂ O₄ and contains N₂ O₅ in the weight ratio of N₂ O₅ :nitric acid of about 1:3. At the same time, a nitric acid solution containing 20 wt % N₂ O₄ and 8 wt % water is fed continuously through the cathode compartment 12. Electrical current is passed through the cell 6 at 4.5 volts and a current density of 0.15-0.2 amps cm⁻², and the flow rate of anolyte adjusted such that the N₂ O₅ content of the acid solution leaving the anode compartment 10 is increased to an N₂ O₅ --to--HNO₃ ratio of about 8:17 by weight.

The electrochemical reactions within the cell 6 cause the temperature of the acid solutions within the anode and cathode compartments 10 and 12 to increase. The heated product acid solution from the anode compartment 10, which at this point has a temperature of typically 15°-25° C., is then fed to the flow divider 8 which divides the acid solution into two streams (A) and (B).

Stream (A) is recycled directly to the reservoir 2. Stream (B) is recycled to the reservoir 2 through a chiller/crystalliser 16 and a solids separator 18. The chiller/crystalliser 16 cools the stream (B) to a temperature (typically -15° C.) at which a proportion of the N₂ O₅ dissolved in solution is caused to precipitate out as an N₂ O₅ solute, and a proportion of the N₂ O₄ dissolved in solution is cause to form a separate liquid phase. The solute is recovered from the stream (B) in the solids separator 18 which may comprise, for example, a filter or a hydrocyclone. The cold, N₂ O₅ -depleted stream (B) is then returned to the reservoir 2 where its entrained liquid N₂ O₄ phase rapidly redissolves in the acid solution due to the warmer conditions which prevail there.

Nitric acid and liquid N₂ O₄ are added to the reservoir 2 to make up for process losses. The relative flow rates of streams (A) and (B) and the actual temperature of precipitation are adjusted to return the N₂ O₅ --to--nitric acid ratio in the reservoir to 1:3 so that the whole process exists in a state of equilibrium. The rate of N₂ O₄ addition is sufficiently high to form a separate, liquid N₂ O₄ layer (D) in the reservoir above the acid layer (E). This ensures that at the controlled temperature within the reservoir (2) of typically 10° C., the acid layer is effectively saturated with dissolved N₂ O₄ which promotes both high rates of N₂ O₅ production in the cell 2 at which current efficiencies, and high rates of N₂ O₅ precipitation in the chiller/crystalliser 16. A heating/cooling coil 20 is used to control the temperature of the reservoir 2. The addition of fresh nitric acid to the reservoir 2, and the use of an operating temperature in the reservoir which is generally much higher than that of the solids separator 18, help to ensure that any N₂ O₅ precipitate carried over from the separator is rapidly redissolved in the reservoir before the acid solution is pumped back to the cell 6.

EXAMPLE 2

The method and method conditions of Example 1 were repeated except that the acid solution was passed in series through three electrochemical cells 10 with their anode compartments 16 connected in series. In order to suppress the formation of a separate N₂ O₄ phase during cooling/precipitation, the concentration of N₂ O₄ in the acid solution within the reservoir was maintained at about 30 wt % by carefully controlling its rate of addition. At 10° C., the acid solution within the resevoir was not therefore saturated with N₂ O₄ and a separate N₂ O₄ layer did not form. The flow rate through the cells 10 was adjusted to produce an acid solution leaving the last anode compartment having a N₂ O₅ --to--HNO₃ ratio of about 3:5 at about 25° C., which is appropriately at the saturation limit of N₂ O₅ in solutions of nitric acid and N₂ O₄ at that temperature.

EXAMPLE 3

The wet solvate product from Example 1 was washed at 5° C. with a portion of the N₂ O₄ layer taken from the reservoir 20 to remove nitric acid from the surface of the solvate crystals. The N₂ O₄ was then returned to the reservoir to prevent loss of N₂ O₅ from the system. The washed solvate was then dried in a stream of dry ozonised air at 10° C., and dissolved in dichloromethane in the proportion of 10 g dried solvate to 90 g dichloromethane.

EXAMPLE 4

The wet solvate product of Example 1 or Example 2 was washed with a small amount of 99% nitric acid at 0° C. to remove its surface contamination of residual N₂ O₄ -rich nitric acid resulting from the solvates method of preparation. System losses were minimised by feeding the spent nitric acid washings to the reservoir 2. The washed solvate was then added to 99% nitric acid in the ratio of 35 parts by weight of solvate to 65 parts by weight of nitric acid to produce a clear concentrated solution of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid containing low levels of N₂ O₄.

EXAMPLE 5

The method of Example 4 was repeated except that the washed solvate was added to 99% nitric acid in the ratio of 85 parts by weight of solvate to 15 parts by weight of nitric acid, to produce a slurry of N₂ O₅ in nitric acid.

EXAMPLES 6 and 7

The methods of Examples 4 and 5 were repeated except that the nitric acid washing steps were omitted, resulting in products containing slightly higher levels of N₂ O₄. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of separating N₂ O₅ from its solution in nitric acid characterised by the steps of(a) preparing, by the electrochemical oxidation of N₂ O₄ in nitric acid, a nitric acid solution at a temperature of at least 10° C. containing at least 45 wt % of dissolved (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅) and having a dissolved N₂ O₅ :nitric acid ratio by weight of at least 1:3, and (b) cooling the acid solution to less than 8° C. until an N₂ O₅ solvate precipitates from solution.
 2. A method according to claim 1 characterised in that the acid solution in step (a) contains at least 50 wt % of dissolved (N₂ O₄ +N₂ O₅).
 3. A method according to claim 2 characterised in that the acid solution is cooled in step (b) to a temperature of less than -5° C.
 4. A method according to claim 1 characterised in that the ratio by weight of N₂ O₄ to nitric acid in the acid solution prepared in step (a) is from 1:4 to saturation.
 5. A method according to claim 1 characterised in that the acid solution prepared in step (a) contains at least 15 wt % N₂ O₄.
 6. A method according to claim 1 characterised in that the nitric acid solution is cooled in step (b) to a temperature of from -25° C. to 0° C.
 7. A method according to claim 1 characterised by the subsequent step of (c) recovering the N₂ O₅ solvate from the acid solution.
 8. A method according to claim 7 characterised in that the acid solution comprises a product stream taken continuously from the anode compartment of an electrochemical cell employed for said electrochemical oxidation.
 9. A method according to claim 8 characterised in that at least part of the N₂ O₅ -depleted product stream from step (c) is recirculated back through the anode compartment of the cell.
 10. A method according to claim 9 characterised in that part of the recirculated product stream bypasses steps (b) and (c).
 11. A method according to claim 9 characterised in that N₂ O₄ is added to the product stream after step (c) but before the steam re-enters the anode compartment of the cell.
 12. A method according to claim 11 characterised in that the N₂ O₄ is added to the product stream in a reservoir containing the product acid as a first liquid phase and N₂ O₄ as a second liquid phase.
 13. A method according to claim 7 characterised in that after step (c), the recovered N₂ O₅ solvate is at least partly dissolved in an organic solvent.
 14. A method according to claim 7 characterised in that after step (c), the recovered N₂ O₅ solvate is at least partly dissolved in nitric acid. 